Visiteur
Commercial partnership — This article contains affiliate links. If you book through these links, Pixidia earns a small commission at no extra cost to you. Learn more

VitiLoire 2026 is the Loire Valley’s flagship wine festival, held on 30–31 May in Tours, France. Free entry, tasting glass from €6. Around 140 winemakers representing 79 appellations gather on Boulevard Heurteloup, 50 metres from Tours train station. From London, take the Eurostar to Paris then a TGV to Tours — roughly 3h45 door to door. Since 31 May is Whit Sunday in France (a public holiday), French visitors get a long weekend: book your train and hotel well in advance.

A weekend in Tours with a glass in hand, right next to the station — this is a wine lover’s trip from the UK that I’d recommend without hesitation. VitiLoire, the 23rd edition of the Loire Valley wine festival, takes over Boulevard Heurteloup and the Jardin de la Préfecture on 30–31 May 2026. One hundred and forty winemakers in their wooden stalls, Michelin-starred chefs in live demonstrations, a photography exhibition on women in wine, and a blind tasting competition named after the great oenologist Jacques Puisais: the programme is as layered as a great Vouvray Chenin Blanc. And the best part? Entry is free.

From London St Pancras, the Eurostar reaches Paris Gare du Nord in around 2h15, then a 45-minute transfer across the city brings you to Paris Montparnasse for the TGV inoui — arriving at Tours in just 1h14, less than 100 metres from the festival. Total journey from London: around 3h45 to 4 hours. For budget travellers, the Ouigo low-cost TGV starts at €10 and arrives at Saint-Pierre-des-Corps, 5 minutes by TER shuttle from central Tours. VitiLoire is, quite simply, a perfect excuse for a gourmet long weekend in the Loire — especially as 31 May is Whit Sunday in France, when many French visitors extend their stay through Monday.

1. VitiLoire 2026: programme, venue and prices

Loire Valley wine festival outdoors, winemakers and visitors by the Loire river
Photo by VENUS MAJOR on Unsplash

Jardin de la Préfecture, Boulevard Heurteloup — Tours

Free entry, tasting glass €6 30–31 May 2026 18–23 °C Whit Weekend (France)

VitiLoire has been running for 23 editions — a beloved open-air festival created in 2003 by the City of Tours, cancelled only during COVID (2020–2021), and regularly drawing over 40,000 visitors since 2023. In 2026, the festival runs Saturday 30 May from 10 am to 7 pm and Sunday 31 May from 10 am to 6 pm, across three interlinked zones: Boulevard Heurteloup (the main winemaker stands), Place de la Gare and the Jardin de la Préfecture (workshops). According to the official City of Tours page, around 140 winemakers represent 79 appellations from the Loire Valley, alongside 20 artisan food producers showcasing local Touraine specialities.

The concept is beautifully simple: entry is completely free. To taste, you purchase the official VitiLoire glass for €6 — an engraved glass that doubles as a keepsake and gives you access to every stand and workshop. Bottles are sold directly from the producers at cellar-door prices (from €5 for a Touraine générique to €40 for a great Vouvray moelleux or a Sancerre).

2026 programme highlights

  • Photo exhibition « Vigneronnes de Loire » by Anne Piégu — on the railings of the Préfecture from 23 May to 27 September 2026, even before the festival opens
  • Grand Test Jacques Puisais — 3rd edition, Saturday afternoon at the Palais des Congrès: blind tasting of 13 Loire wines in teams, 125 places at €15
  • Public masterclass Sunday 12:30–1:30 pm — led by a regional sommelier, personalised sensory profile, included in the price of the tasting glass
  • Chef’s Pavilion — live culinary demonstrations (previous editions: Christophe Hay 2 Michelin stars, Kevin Gardien 1 star)
  • VitiLoire Portrait — interactive experience: answer a taste quiz and leave with a personalised « wine portrait » of 3 recommended cuvées
Pixidia tip: arrive on Saturday morning from 10 am — the winemakers are fresh, stocks are full, and the crowds are still manageable. Allow at least 4–5 hours for a thorough visit, and bring an empty box or bag for your bottles. Municipal staff can help transport your purchases to the station left-luggage.

2. Loire Valley wines in 2026: a tour of 79 appellations

Vouvray vineyard in Touraine, rows of Chenin Blanc vines in spring
Photo by Snap Wander on Unsplash

Four regions, one river, one extraordinary diversity

79 appellations 25% organic in Touraine Record exports in 2024 43,000 ha of vines

The Loire Valley is France’s most diverse wine region: 43,000 hectares of vines stretching from the Vendée to the Puy-de-Dôme, spread across four major zones. According to InterLoire, Loire wines had their best export year in 25 years in 2024 (400,500 hl, +5%, close to €200 million in value). VitiLoire is the national showcase for this dynamic.

The four wine families at VitiLoire:

Pays Nantais — The Melon de Bourgogne grape reigns here in Muscadet, undergoing a remarkable renaissance since 2015 thanks to communal crus (Clisson, Gorges, Le Pallet) aged on the lees. These are dry, mineral wines of unexpected complexity.

Anjou-Saumur — The heartland of Chenin Blanc in all its expressions: dry and ethereal Savennières, sweet Côteaux du Layon, and the luscious Quarts de Chaume (the Loire’s only Grand Cru). On the red side, Saumur-Champigny in Cabernet Franc is supple and fruit-forward.

Touraine — The best-represented zone, naturally, as the festival is in Tours. Vouvray (Chenin Blanc in every expression: dry, off-dry, sparkling, sweet) is the undisputed star. Look out for the Domaine Huet, a world reference in biodynamics since 1993. Chinon and Bourgueil champion red Cabernet Franc, from light and fruity to serious cellar wines.

Centre-Loire — Sauvignon Blanc country: Sancerre (flinty minerality, plus a much-admired Pinot Noir red) and Pouilly-Fumé (gunflint aromas). These pair perfectly with the Loire goat’s cheeses in the food village.

Weekend pairings not to miss

  • Dry or off-dry Vouvray + Sainte-Maure-de-Touraine AOP (ash-rolled goat’s cheese)
  • Chinon rouge + rillettes de Tours IGP on rustic bread
  • Crémant de Loire brut + warm fouées (filled Loire flatbreads)
  • Sancerre blanc + fresh Touraine goat’s cheese
Pixidia tip: ask the winemakers to pour their off-menu cuvées — the biodynamic parcels (over 25% of Touraine’s vineyard area) often hide the best surprises. Spitting is entirely normal at tasting events: it’s professional, not impolite, and the only way to stay the course over a full day.
Half-day tasting in the Vouvray cellars From €125
Book my Vouvray visit

3. Getting to VitiLoire from the UK

TGV inoui high-speed train, departing Paris Montparnasse for Tours in 1h14
Photo by Snap Wander on Unsplash

~3h45 from London — the festival starts the moment you step off the train

~3h45 from London From €10 (Ouigo) 50 m walk from Tours station ~5h from Calais by car

For UK visitors, the journey is straightforward: Eurostar from London St Pancras to Paris Gare du Nord (around 2h15), then a cross-Paris transfer to Gare Montparnasse — allow 45 minutes (Métro Line 4 direct, ~25 min, plus walking and buffer time). From Montparnasse, the TGV inoui reaches Tours in just 1h14, with the station exit less than 100 metres from the festival stands. According to Trainline, around 15 direct TGVs run daily between Paris and Tours. Total door-to-door from London: roughly 3h45 to 4 hours — faster than many domestic UK trips.

Budget option — Ouigo: the low-cost TGV (from €10 per adult, €8 for under-12s) arrives at Saint-Pierre-des-Corps, 2.7 km from central Tours. A 5-minute TER shuttle (€2.20) connects to Tours main station. Good for families, as long as you don’t overdo the wine shopping on the way back.

By car from the Channel: from Calais via the A26/A10 direction Bordeaux, exit Tours-Centre, around 560 km — roughly 5 hours. VINCI Parking at Gare de Tours (Place du Général Leclerc, 24/7) or seven P+R park-and-ride sites around Tours (€4.20/day including transport). Note: 31 May is a public holiday in France, so roads can be busy on Sunday evening.

Practical tips

  • Book Eurostar and TGV together on Trainline or SNCF Connect — allow at least 90 minutes connection time in Paris to be safe
  • Left-luggage facilities available at Tours station — essential for wine buyers before the return journey
  • Cases of 6 bottles accepted as cabin luggage on most TGVs (check your operator’s baggage policy)
  • Tram line A and Fil Bleu buses (lines 2, 4, 5, 10, 11) serve Boulevard Heurteloup from across the city centre
Pixidia tip: Sunday evening return trains from Tours fill up quickly, as 31 May is Whit Sunday in France — a public holiday that creates a surge in domestic travel. Book your return leg at the same time as your outbound, ideally for a late Sunday or Monday morning departure, when the rush has eased and you can squeeze in a morning visit to the Vouvray troglodyte cellars.

4. Where to eat and drink in Tours this weekend

Restaurant terrace in old Tours, half-timbered houses on Place Plumereau
Photo by Margit Knobloch on Unsplash

From a fouée on Place Plumereau to a Michelin-starred dinner

3 starred restaurants near Tours €15–25 for lunch in a bistro Place Plumereau 10 min away IGP and AOP local specialities

Tours has a quietly remarkable food scene. During VitiLoire, the entire city joins the celebration: the festival’s food village already features around twenty artisan producers (rillettes IGP, Sainte-Maure-de-Touraine AOP goat’s cheese, fouées, Loire poultry), but Place Plumereau in the Vieux-Tours (10 minutes on foot) offers around twenty lively terraces for lunch or dinner — perfect after a morning of tasting.

Fine dining tables worth booking: Fleur de Loire in Blois (55 km, Christophe Hay 2 Michelin stars + 1 green star, a total Loire cuisine of river fish and kitchen-garden vegetables) for a gala dinner on Saturday evening. At 25 km from Tours, the Auberge du XIIe siècle in Saché (Kévin Gardien, 1 star) offers elegant cooking with a superb Loire wine list. In the city, La Roche le Roy (1 star, chef Maxime Vandoni) is ideal for a Friday evening dinner the night before VitiLoire.

Touraine specialities not to miss

  • Rillettes de Tours IGP — coarser and drier in texture than Le Mans rillettes, served on rustic bread
  • Fouée tourangelle — a puffed flatbread to fill with Sainte-Maure cheese, rillettes or beurre blanc: the defining taste of Touraine
  • Sainte-Maure-de-Touraine AOP — ash-coated log-shaped goat’s cheese with a straw through the centre, with an incomparable nutty flavour
  • Rillons — chunks of pork slow-cooked in fat, spiced, best served warm
Pixidia tip: Saturday evening in central Tours, restaurants fill up fast. Book ahead, or head to a gastronomic table outside the centre (Saché, Montbazon). For a quick, local bite at the festival itself, the food village stalls are excellent: fouées to fill for €4–6, rillettes €5–8 for 200g.
Half-day excursion: 2 local cellars from Tours From €99
Book my vineyard excursion

5. Beyond the wine: tours and châteaux in Touraine

Château de Chambord with its double-helix staircase attributed to Leonardo da Vinci, Loir-et-Cher
Photo by Colin Watts on Unsplash

Cathedrals, châteaux and troglodyte caves

Chambord 45 km away Cathedral free entry Chaumont gardens Vouvray 10 km

VitiLoire runs over two days, and a full weekend in the Loire valley offers plenty more to explore. Touraine has an extraordinary density of heritage sites within easy reach by car or bike from Tours.

In Tours itself: the Cathédrale Saint-Gatien (Flamboyant Gothic, 13th-century stained glass) is free and open from 8:30 am to 8 pm — a peaceful 30-minute break between tastings. Place Plumereau and the Vieux-Tours (15th-century half-timbered houses) are 10 minutes on foot from the festival.

Around Tours: Château de Chambord (45 km east, €14.50/adult) and Château de Chenonceau (35 km, €17/adult, the « Ladies’ Castle ») are the two unmissable UNESCO World Heritage sites. Less well known: the Prieuré Saint-Cosme in La Riche (3 km, rose gardens and the tomb of the Renaissance poet Ronsard). The Festival International des Jardins de Chaumont-sur-Loire (40 km, open until 1 November 2026, theme: « The Garden Goes to the Cinema », ~€13) makes a lovely add-on for a Monday visit.

Independent wine tourism: 10 km from Tours, the troglodyte caves of Vouvray (Cave de Vouvray: 3 km of galleries, 6 million bottles; Domaine Sylvain Gaudron: a 13th-century cellar) offer guided tours with tastings from €7 — a natural complement to VitiLoire for anyone wanting to go deeper into a single appellation.

  • Cathédrale Saint-Gatien — 13th-century stained glass, free entry, guided tour €7
  • Château de Chambord — 45 km, Leonardo da Vinci’s double-helix staircase, €14.50
  • Vouvray troglodyte caves — 10 km, 3 km of galleries, from €7
  • Festival des Jardins de Chaumont-sur-Loire — 40 km, open until 1 November 2026
Pixidia tip: if you’re staying into Monday, the châteaux are generally much quieter on Monday mornings than over the weekend. Chambord opens at 9 am — arrive early for near-empty terraces and the famous double staircase all to yourself.

Practical information for your VitiLoire weekend

Travel Insurance — SafetyWing

Nomad Insurance provides global cover from $56 per 4 weeks — ideal for UK travellers heading to France for the festival. 10% off via our link.

From $56 / 4 weeks
Get covered

Frequently asked questions about VitiLoire 2026

What exactly is VitiLoire 2026?

VitiLoire is the annual Loire Valley wine festival, organised by the City of Tours since 2003. The 23rd edition takes place on 30–31 May 2026, outdoors on Boulevard Heurteloup, facing Tours train station. Entry is free, the tasting glass costs €6, and around 140 winemakers representing 79 appellations take part. In 2023 and 2024 the festival attracted over 40,000 visitors. Source: City of Tours — official VitiLoire page.

How much does it cost to enter VitiLoire 2026?

Entry is entirely free. To taste the wines, you need to buy the official VitiLoire glass for €6 — this engraved glass is valid at every stand and every workshop and makes a great souvenir. The Saturday Grand Test (blind tasting at the Palais des Congrès) is an optional paid event at €15, with only 125 places available. Source: JDS.fr — VitiLoire 2026 prices.

How do I get to VitiLoire from the UK?

The easiest route from the UK is by train: Eurostar from London St Pancras to Paris Gare du Nord (~2h15), then a 45-minute cross-Paris transfer to Gare Montparnasse (Métro Line 4), then the TGV inoui to Tours (1h14). Total journey: roughly 3h45 to 4 hours from London. Tours station is 50 metres from the festival site. Budget travellers can take the Ouigo low-cost TGV from €10 to Saint-Pierre-des-Corps, then a 5-minute TER shuttle (€2.20) to Tours centre. Source: Trainline — London to Paris.

Which wines can you taste at VitiLoire?

All Loire Valley wines: Muscadet (Pays Nantais), Anjou, Saumur-Champigny, Vouvray (Chenin Blanc in every style), Montlouis-sur-Loire, Chinon and Bourgueil (Cabernet Franc), Sancerre and Pouilly-Fumé (Sauvignon Blanc), and many more. In all, 79 appellations are represented — reds, whites, rosés, sparkling, off-dry and sweet. Source: Touraine Val de Loire Tourism.

What is the Grand Test des vins de Loire « Jacques Puisais »?

The Grand Test is a blind tasting competition open to the public, held at the Palais des Congrès in Tours on Saturday afternoon. The 2026 edition (3rd year) has 125 participants tasting 13 Loire wines (whites, reds, sparkling) and identifying the grape variety, appellation and vintage via smartphone. Cost: €15 per person, including glass, apron and tasting notes. The 2026 format introduces team play, cultural questions and educational podcasts. Registration: Benoît Gautier, +33 6 15 30 30 92. Source: Vigneron du Val de Loire.

Where to stay in Tours for the VitiLoire weekend?

The Tours city centre has many hotels close to the festival. The best-placed options: Hôtel Val de Loire (33 Boulevard Heurteloup, literally on the festival site), Artist Hôtel Tours 4* (Best Western Plus, actively promotes its VitiLoire packages), Ibis Tours Centre Gare (budget option with an excellent location). The weekend of 31 May = Whit Sunday in France (2026), creating very high demand: book at least 2–3 months ahead. Source: Artist Hôtel Tours.

Sources

Research conducted 13 May 2026 — 70 sources consulted.

Ready for your VitiLoire weekend in Tours?

VitiLoire is the festival that turns a late May weekend into a deep dive into one of France’s most exciting wine regions — just 3h45 from London by train. Plan your Loire Valley itinerary with Pixidia.

Discover my Loire Valley itineraries

Explore our travel magazine

Hundreds of articles, guides and inspiration for your next trips around the world.

Discover the magazine
Vos préférences ont été enregistrées.